Michigan Press Release Cbfm 10.8.13

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    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    October 8, 2013

    Contact: LuAnne Kozma, Committee to Ban Fracking in Michigan

    (231) 944-8750 [email protected]

    Committee to Ban Fracking in Michigan ballot initiative rallies 70,000

    signatures, organizers to continue campaign and fundraising

    Charlevoix, Michigan The Committee to Ban Fracking in Michigan, the ballot question

    committee collecting signatures for a legislative initiative to put a ban on horizontal fracking

    and frack wastes to a statewide vote in 2014, reports that it has not yet gathered the required

    258,088 signatures in a six-month period that started in April. Committee organizers will

    pursue fundraising activities to continue gathering signatures until the required number is met,

    and will use both paid and volunteer petitioners. The official deadline for turning in signatures

    is in May 2014.

    The Committee tallies 69,890 signatures at press time and is still counting. Last year, the

    Committee gathered over 30,000 signatures on a similar initiative that would have amended the

    state constitution to ban fracking. In all, the Committee manages over 500 volunteers who

    collected over 92% of the signatures, and ten paid petitioners, with a dedicated group of all-

    volunteer organizers. The Committee aims to change that equation in the coming months.

    We've built the movement to ban fracking and spread the word statewide reaching tens of

    thousands of Michigan voters. We now know that people want direct democracy to work, but

    it's only a matter of time and money to get more feet on the ground doing the talking and

    collecting. We have come to the conclusion that we need to pay experienced circulators as

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    many other ballot initiatives have successfully done, said campaign director LuAnne Kozma.

    She noted that while dedicated campaign volunteers have given generous amounts of their time

    and many have learned and mastered the art of ballot initiative petitioning, most volunteers

    have limited experience with the rigors and timeliness requirements of ballot initiatives. Of

    course we are disappointed with not meeting the goal in these past six months, we have a ways

    to go, but no one said it would be easy to train hundreds of people about the mechanics of

    direct democracy and reach 320,000 voters in person. Ballot initiatives require determination

    and several tries. We are fired up by how many people we have now met who also want to ban

    fracking. We are determined to continue and we are destined to win.

    The tide is turning in the Committee's favor. Circulators reported seeing a dramatic difference

    in public attitudes this year compared to last, which is backed up by Pew Research Center

    survey results that more Americans now oppose fracking than favor it (49% to 44%), and a

    sixteen-point increase in opposition occurred in the Midwest, with a 48% majority of

    Midwesterners now opposing fracking, compared to only 32% opposed six months ago, the

    same time period as the Committee's campaign.(1)

    We definitely noticed the difference. The gathering is easy and getting easier, said Peggy

    Case, Committee to Ban Fracking organizer for northwest Michigan. As a grassroots

    movement, we started with a committee of nine people and zero dollars at the start of the year,

    and began building a network of people who reached 70,000 people face-to-face. We encounter

    people who thank us for doing this and are rooting for us to win. They get it that only a ban can

    protect us and that to get fracked with 'regulated fracking' is not the answer. Our only obstacle

    is getting enough people out there for longer periods of time and to do that, we need the

    financial resources to pay knowledgeable, dedicated workers to gather signatures in the

    volumes necessary to get on the ballot. We've now trained paid petitioners in our issue and have

    seen how effective they are in reaching out to people about fracking, getting significant

    numbers of signatures, and being committed to making it to the ballot. An effective paid

    petitioner can gather 500 to 1,000 signatures in one week. This is a 'call to arms' and action.

    Supporters who want to make a difference and make this happen, all they have to do is write a

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    check. We need a core of significant donors who are willing to make larger contributions.

    Without a core organization, union or religious group sponsoring this drive, our effort is

    dependent upon our fellow humans who want to protect each other from fracking. Who will

    step up and give those amounts? The sooner we have those contributions, large and small, the

    sooner we can continue.

    The Committee plans a series of fundraiser events throughout the fall and will host a free

    screening of the documentary Gasland Part II, with filmmaker Josh Fox in his only live

    appearance in Michigan on Wednesday, October 16 at the Main Art Theatre in Royal Oak at

    6:30 p.m. Details are at the Committee's website:www.letsbanfracking.org. Campaign details

    will be announced at the screening after the Committee meets to plan strategy.

    The list of places in Michigan getting fracked by horizontal fracking continues to grow. Last

    month permits were issued for a frack well in Livingston County just 30 miles from Lansing, as

    well as in Oceana and Sanilac counties. Hillsdale, Ionia, Muskegon, Kalkaska, Crawford,

    Ogemaw and Roscommon, all are facing deep frack wells, along with wells in Cheboygan,

    Missaukee and Antrim counties. Mineral rights for fracking have been leased out in nearly

    every county in the Lower Peninsula. Michigan has over 1,000 toxic injection wells for frack

    wastes and is building more, and is expected to take in wastes from other states' fracking

    operations such as Ohio which has less than 200 injection wells projected to be filled to

    capacity within two years. The frack industry is using more water per frack in Michigan, with

    the Canadian company Encana proposing to use over 1 billion gallons of fresh groundwater in a

    series of wells, topping national records.

    Donors are urged to contact the Committee by phone at: 231-944-8750. Contributions can also

    be made online at www.letsbanfracking.org or by check to: Committee to Ban Fracking in

    Michigan, PO Box 490, Charlevoix, MI, 49720. Contributions must include: contributor's

    name, address, occupation, employer name, and employer address.

    (1) Pew Research Center, September 2013, http://www.people-press.org/files/legacy-pdf/9-26-13%20Energy

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